Monday, June 30, 2008



1.) The above picture is when we were changing his dressings. We had almost sealed it shut when we though we may take a few pics to share. To post. Enjoy!




This is after the sutures are placed.



Yummy!


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Sunday, June 29, 2008

post #102

Today we went to the Badem's house. Since we are Jarboes...chaos, of course, ensued.

We were invited over to watch Germany play Spain in the European Cup. Germany lost. Rainer was less than happy. Jack was in a bad mood and nothing seemed to make it better. He slept in til 8:30 and even took a decent nap but he was still fussy.
Anywho-- Dr. B, Ally, me and all 3 boys were in the pool and playing on the Megastation. After a while I put Jack in the hot tub with me. He FINALLY calmed down. He LOVED it! Shortly after the game the guys came outside to swim with us. All was going well until JP climbed out and a stair broke. He didn't say much--he just looked kinda pale and walked to the shallow end. When he got out he noticed his leg was bleeding. After Dr. B looked it over a second she decided he needed stitches. I, of course, broke the net to the Megastation trying to get out of the pool.

JP looked like he was going to throw his guts up after Dr. B had poked and prodded at his shin. I went inside with Jack and started calling relatives to keep Jack while I took him to the office. After a good while and reaching 5 different voice mails I finally reached my parents (I heard lalter all of JP's family had gone out on the boat together) and they said the would meet us at the clinic so I could help Dr. B stitch him up. It was really awesome of them to be there and help.

After raiding plastic surgery we found stitches and kits. We drew up some Lidocaine and had Jean lay down on the table. Dr. B cleaned the wound-which Jean says was the worst part-and numbed it. She gave him a Xanax to help him relax. She put in 5 or 6 stitches. She did a great job! We very rarely stitch anything in the office so it's fairly impressive. Not to mention she saved us over $100 in ER costs. Then she even fed us!

Rainer made his famous Rainer-Burgers and they were the best!

If JP was gonna have to have stitches this weekend-he did it at the right place. I can't thank Dr B enough for taking us to the office and dealing with all the craziness and my parents for dropping everything to help with Jack.



The Mega-Station:

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Father's Day 2008. New pic for Dad from Jack!!!




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Thursday, June 12, 2008

Breath Holding Spells and Baby Girls

First: A BIG BIG CONGRATS to Marshall and Miranda on their 3rd baby girl! We already know they make beautiful girls so there is no doubt that this little lady will be just as sweet and special.

So...Breath Holding Spells. I am gonna try and keep this brief.

Jack is holding his breath-but not on purpose. When he gets hurt (he's 15 months-he is always falling) he "over exhales" and stops breathing. He did this in Brenda and Howard's front yard last week for the first time and he did it again tonight. I took him to see his pediatrician about it and he called it Breath Holding Spells. It occurs in 0.1 - 5% of children and peaks at age 2. Here is a bit more detail as to what it is:

Dr. Greene "This is a typical scene: A little child is playing happily, something upsets her, she exhales forcefully with a brief, shrill cry -- but she doesn't take another breath. You wait, but she still doesn't breathe. She looks as if she's crying, but no sound emerges. She begins to turn blue, her face strained, and still she is not breathing. Now she is unconscious, unresponsive, limp; the sight of her lifeless body is terrifying. Now her back arches, and her blue arms and legs begin to jerk uncontrollably. Your heart is pounding, frantic..."

We have been lucky thus far as Jack only turned bluish the first time.

Dr. Greene "
Desperate parents often want to splash cold water on the child's face, start mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, or even begin CPR. Thankfully, breath-holding spells resolve spontaneously soon after the child passes out, and unless the fall hurts the child, she will be fine afterwards. The spell usually resolves within 30 to 60 seconds, with the child catching her breath and starting to cry or scream. Sometimes children will have real seizures as part of breath-holding spells, but these brief seizures are not harmful, and there is no increased risk of the child's developing a seizure disorder. Breath-holding spells occur in about 0.1 to 5% of children, usually between ages 6 months to 6 years old.

These spells are provoked by the child's not getting her own way. While they are triggered by a child being angry or surprised, they are thought to be reflexive, not intentional behaviors. Breath-holding is quite rare before 6 months of age. It peaks as children enter the twos, and disappears finally by about age five. The spells occur sporadically, but when they do occur, it is not uncommon for there to be several spells within a single day. Once parents have witnessed one breath-holding spell, they can often predict when another one is about to happen."

So tonight wasn't quite the surprise last week was--and people telling you to blow in their face is a JOKE. JP and I both blew in his face 3 or 4 times and he still couldn't breathe. You can shake the kid--it makes no difference. He is really TRYING to take a breath and his lungs just won't let him. It sucks for us, it must suck for him.


Dang! SO much from keeping it brief, huh?